0 used to describe an activity that a government and a profit-making company invest in and work on together:
The Prime Minister announced a public-private plan to build six new hospitals.
a public-private initiative/investment/venture
That, in fact, is the whole idea behind public-private partnerships: they provide a means of breaking the compromise.
In this respect the reform formalised and institutionalised the public-private partnership, which had begun earlier in the century.
In this respect we see a return to the idea of a public-private partnership, which had a strong hold until the 1930s.
The next phase, in which social rights and public responsibility were gradually introduced and expanded, supported a collaborative model with a strong public-private partnership.
The public-private partnership, diversity of funding, biodiversity, ecology, land and water use, industrial applications of biological materials and food processing are all considered.
Beginning in 1970, public-private sector meetings started to become institutionalised at a very high level.
The work of government is now increasingly being conditioned by public-private partnerships, and by formal and informal networks involving state and non-state agencies.
If this were to be achieved, it might be possible to apply public-private remedies to the city's housing crisis.